Current:Home > StocksCourtney Williams’ go-to guard play gives Lynx key 3-pointers in Game 1 win -WealthPro Academy
Courtney Williams’ go-to guard play gives Lynx key 3-pointers in Game 1 win
View
Date:2025-04-15 00:24:58
BROOKLYN, NEW YORK — When Courtney Williams signed as a free agent with Minnesota in February, the ninth-year guard knew she’d have to tweak her game, and focus on passing more than scoring.
After all, the Lynx feature one of the best players in the world in Napheesa Collier, a forward who can score inside and out and make all sorts of defensive plays. Collier will almost always be the go-to, especially when the Lynx need a bucket in a late-game situation.
But it turns out the 5-foot-8 guard can still be a No. 1 offensive option — especially when her team needs it.
Williams hit two crazy, how-did-that-happen? 3s, one with 5.5 seconds left in regulation and the other with 1:16 to play in overtime, helping the Lynx pull off a stunning, come-from-behind win in Game 1 of the WNBA Finals, beating the New York Liberty 95-93 in Barclays Center.
Minnesota now leads the best-of-five series 1-0. Game 2 is Sunday at Barclays before the series moves to Minneapolis for Game 3 and, if necessary, Game 4. Game 5 would be back in New York.
MORE:WNBA Finals will go to best-of-seven series next year, commissioner says
MORE:USA TODAY staff predictions for Liberty vs. Lynx
Williams finished with a team-high 23 points, Kayla McBride added 22 and Collier chipped in 21. The Defensive Player of the Year, Collier also tallied eight rebounds, six blocks and three steals.
Williams’ most crucial points came down the stretch, a result, Minnesota coach Cheryl Reeve said, of the veteran playmaker recognizing that “her team needed her to be more aggressive.”
Down 3 with 18 seconds to go, Williams drained a 3 with 5.5 seconds on the clock — and drew a foul on Sabrina Ionescu for a potential four-point play. Her make came after her miss, and she got another shot (literally) because of an offensive board by Minnesota’s Alanna Smith. It was one of only five offensive rebounds the Lynx nabbed in the game, but it was huge. Williams drained the free throw, giving the Lynx a one-point edge — the first time they’d led all night. New York coach Sandy Brondello called it a “backbreaking” sequence.
After a chaotic back-and-forth on the other end, Breanna Stewart stepped to the line for two shots with .8 seconds left in regulation. She hit the first but missed the second, and suddenly, despite the fact that New York had at one point held an 18-point lead, the game was headed to overtime.
Williams’ second big 3 came with 1:16 in the extra period, with the Lynx rolling and the Liberty on their heels. Her 28-footer stretched Minnesota’s lead back to four, and on the following possession, she finished at the rim for two more points. Collier wound up hitting the game-winner, a tough, turnaround fadeaway 12-footer with 8.8 seconds to play.
Williams and Collier combined to score 22 of Minnesota’s final 24 points.
Stewart got a great look inside at the buzzer, but couldn’t finish.
The comeback tied the largest-ever in WNBA Finals history; in 1999, the Liberty came back from 18 down to beat the Houston Comets (Houston went on to win the championship).
Williams, a Georgia native whose Southern drawl always makes her teammates and coaches smile, said her flurry of late-game points is “a testament to how we believe in each other. We have so many great 3-point shooters, and the fact that these girls are out here trying to get me the ball, I mean, I could cry. This is amazing. I love it.
"These people I'm around, we believe in each other so much. It's crazy, man. I'm happy to be here."
The same cannot be said for the Liberty, who looked shell-shocked postgame.
Stewart, who finished with 18 points and nine rebounds, said of New York, “we take it on the chin.”
“We were up a lot, then we had a wild kind of sequence to end the fourth, didn’t start overtime great, I had a great look at the end and I didn’t make it,” Stewart said. “But this is a series. We wanted to win, obviously, but the beauty is, we have another game on Sunday and we’ll be ready.”
Asked afterward where her four-point play ranks of her favorite shots, she laughed.
“Where does that rank, I don’t know. It’s No. 1 right now, cause we are here, 1-0,” Williams said.
Then Reeve quipped, “I”m just happy she made a clutch free throw.”
The two ribbed each other back and forth, more proof of what Reeve said after Minnesota’s series-clinching win over Connecticut in the semifinals, when she admitted, “I didn’t really know what we were getting (with Courtney). The basketball, sure, I watched her play for years. But I don’t know if I knew exactly what we were getting in terms of the person or the coachability. You can say anything to her and I love that.”
It’s true. When they studied the stat sheet together Thursday during the postgame news conference, Reeve happily pointed out Williams’ five assists — then wondered aloud, “Does that one you threw to Sabrina count?”
Everyone laughed, Williams the sharpshooter hardest of all.
Email Lindsay Schnell at [email protected] and follow her on social media @Lindsay_Schnell
veryGood! (5721)
Related
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- Probation ordered for boy, 13, after plea in alleged plan for mass shooting at Ohio synagogue
- Which teams will emerge from AFC's playoff logjam to claim final wild-card spots?
- 2 men charged in Pennsylvania school van crash that killed teenage girl, injured 5
- Sonya Massey's family keeps eyes on 'full justice' one month after shooting
- Simply the Best 25 Schitt's Creek Secrets Revealed
- Elon Musk set to attend Italy leader Giorgia Meloni's conservative Atreju political festival in Rome
- The leaders of Italy, the UK and Albania meet in Rome to hold talks on migration
- Clay Aiken's son Parker, 15, makes his TV debut, looks like his father's twin
- Israel finds large tunnel adjacent to Gaza border, raising new questions about prewar intelligence
Ranking
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Black American solidarity with Palestinians is rising and testing longstanding ties to Jewish allies
- US Senate confirms Shreveport attorney as first Black judge in Louisiana’s Western District
- Quaker Oats recalls granola products over concerns of salmonella contamination
- Meet 11-year-old skateboarder Zheng Haohao, the youngest Olympian competing in Paris
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar breaks hip when he falls at concert in Los Angeles
- Terror suspects arrested in Europe, including several linked to Hamas who were allegedly plotting against Jews
- Russia and Ukraine launch numerous drone attacks targeting a Russian air base and Black Sea coast
Recommendation
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Hi Hi!
Federal agency quashes Georgia’s plan to let pharmacies sell medical marijuana
As 2023 holidays dawn, face masks have settled in as an occasional feature of the American landscape
Goodreads has a 'review bombing' problem — and wants its users to help solve it
The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
Mississippi State QB Will Rogers transfers to Washington after dominant run in SEC
Russia and Ukraine launch numerous drone attacks targeting a Russian air base and Black Sea coast
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar breaks hip when he falls at concert in Los Angeles